Father John A. Hardon, S.J. Archives

Education

Homeschooling in the Heart of the Church

Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

At the outset, I would like
to change two words in our title. I wish to address myself to home education
in the heart of the Catholic Church. I have one reason for each of these two
changes. Homeschooling has become a legalistic term which some are interpreting
as in competition with the organized institutional education in schools. Moreover,
while every religion requires home education, the Catholic faith contains the
fullness of Gods revealed truth. Either we grow in understanding this truth
or we lose the faith.

One more observation. We are speaking about home education at the heart
of the Church. At the heart of the Church is the family. Consequently the full
title of our conference is Home Education in the Heart of the Catholic Family.

Our plan is to ask three questions: What is home education? Why is home education
necessary for the survival of the Catholic family? How is home education to
be provided not only for the survival but for the progress of the Catholic family
as we enter the third millennium?

What is Home Education?

Home education is the development by the parents
of the whole personality of a child from infancy to adulthood.

It is education because it draws out, from
the Latin word educere, the natural and supernatural potentialities of a person.
Some of these potentialities are latent in a child from conception and birth;
others are present from the time of Baptism. The parents primary duty is to
cooperate with God as Author of nature and grace to draw out these latent powers
in the child whom they brought into the world.

It is home education twice over. It is first
of all home education because it is done by the parents, without whom there
would be no home. It is secondly done at home, within the ambit of what we commonly
identify as our domicile. Notice, I prefer to speak of home education rather
than home schooling. This is to emphasize the dramatic personal character of
the education, rather than its institutional structure.

When I speak of home education by both parents,
I mean both parents, and not only by the mother. It may be that time-wise, she
devotes more time to the training of her children than the father. No matter.
What is important is that both mother and father are involved. There is a contribution
to the childrens upbringing that, barring a miracle, only the father can provide.
His share in the education of the children is imperative.

Moreover, home education does not absolutely
exclude all other forms or sources of teaching the children. But in every case,
and I mean every case, the home is the primary source. All others or any other
educational agents or agencies are:

secondary, to the home

auxiliary to the home

dependent on the home

subordinate to the home

chosen by the parents and meant to be helpful, never competitive with the home.

What is the span of home education? It is the
whole personal and social life of the child; it is the bodily and spiritual
well-being of the child; it is the physical, emotional, mental and volitional
life of the child.

Why Home Education?

In stating my thesis, I might have said many
things, like:

Home education is helpful for the family, or

Home education is a valuable asset for family life, or

Home education is a powerful aid for the Catholic family, or

Home education is all but necessary for the Catholic family,

Each of these titles would have been true,
but inadequate.

Let me be clear. I am not merely saying that
home education is necessary in the modern world. This is not a conditional necessity.
It is not just because the modern world has become so widely or deeply secularized
that home education has become a necessity. No! I make bold to say that one
of the main contributing factors to the secularization of a once strongly Christian
culture has been the neglect of sound

orthodox

authentic

courageous

magisterial

historic Catholic teaching
in faith and morals by parents, in the home, from the dawn of the infancy of
their children.

The issue we are addressing is perennial. Either
Catholic parents provide their offspring with the education the children need,
or the inevitable happens. As it has happened.

Our main focus here is on Why? Why are parents
so necessary for the proper education their children, and the corresponding
survival of the Catholic family? The reason is really a cluster of reasons,
all derived from what we know about human nature and divine grace.

We Are What We Have Received. The first reason is the mysterious laws of interdependence.
We depend on others for whatever we possess.

This applies first of all to our physical nature. Only
human beings can reproduce other human beings.

This reproduction is not only bodily but also mental
and volitional. What do we know that someone else has not taught us; and what
do we love except what others have helped us to choose and appreciate.

Under God, of primary importance to enlighten and inspire
us are our parents. Parents, in turn, are to recognize that the children brought
into this world are not meant for this world. The childrens destiny is eternal.
It is the parents, more than anyone in the world who are to prepare their children,
in time, indeed, but for eternity.

Parents Are Primary Sources of Grace.
No one reaches heaven without divine grace. No one receives this grace, except
through another human being who is the channel of this grace. Parents are the
primary channels of this grace for their children.

We are here saying much more than meets the
ear. We are saying that in Gods ordinary providence the parents are the main

instruments of spiritual light for the childrens minds,

channels of spiritual strength for the childrens wills.

In a word, parents are the principal condition by which God communicates the graces that children need to reach heaven to save their souls.

This primacy as channels of grace for the children
comes from the sacrament of matrimony which Catholic parents have received.
Matrimony assures them of a lifetime of Gods grace to love each other in faithful
charity and chastity until death. Matrimony also assures them of a lifetime
of Gods grace for the upbringing of their children in loving obedience to God,
as a precondition for reaching a heavenly destiny.

The purpose of marriage is to raise families
for heaven, nothing less, and there can be nothing more.

One of the great blessings of modern home education
is that it is waking up so many parents to their God-given responsibility.

In the providence of God, He allows no evil
or suffering without intending to draw a greater good. The widespread secularization
of organized education in so many countries of the western world has served
as lightening and thunder to arouse complacent parents from their complacency.
They are beginning to ask themselves, What is our duty? What should we do to
join forces with other dedicated fathers and mothers who are making such great
sacrifices for the home education of their children?

How to Provide Home Education?

As we enter the third part of our conference,
I wish to make one thing clear. What I am sharing with you is no mere human
pedagogy. It is not the service of psychology or of educational methodology.

It is nothing less than a mystery of faith.
If I were to offer one passage in St. Pauls letter to the
Romans, where the Apostle tells us, For those who love God, everything works
together into good (Romans 8:28).

What is St.
Paul saying? He is telling us that, if we are united
with God in our love, he will use us to accomplish His divine plans.

Or, put in other words, depending on our union
with Gods will by our practice of virtue, He will use us as channels of His
grace.

Let me be stark clear. This is not merely giving
others a good example, which we should. It is not merely that one does not give
what he does not have, which is obvious.

It is much deeper. It means that in the measure
of our wills being conformed to the will of Godin the measure that we love
GodHe will infallibly use us to accomplish the designs that He wants to achieve
especially in the lives of others.

What does this mean for home education? Everything!

In the degree that parents love God, God will
use them to teach and train their children.

If the parents have a strong faith, God will use them to strengthen the faith of their children.

If the parents are humble, they will effectively teach humility to their children.

If the parents are
truthful, and hopeful, and patient and chaste, and charitable, and prayerfulGod
will use them as His chosen means of teaching and training their offspring in
trust and hope and patience, and chastity, and prayerfulness.

Prayer

Mary, Mother of God and Mother of the Holy
Family, obtain from your divine Son the graces which home teaching Catholic
parents so desperately need in our day

The grace to see themselves as channels of grace for their children, and

The grace to serve as the channels of grace, even at the cost of a living martyrdom in our day. Amen.